December 31, 2005

Root Causes, Astute Analysis, Crime Stats, Anonymous Comment, Location & Elephants

Addressing "Root Causes" & Astute Analysis








With appreciation to all those like Donato {above} and godsandartists.com (below) who have the wit and creative ability to make such fun cartoons and astute analyses. We should all be so talented.


The best of a Celtic New Year to all ...

Call in the army, pastor pleads -- "We have had this scenario of killings all summer," said Pastor Allan Bowen, of the Abundant Life Assembly on Dixon Rd." in Etobicoke Tom Godfrey, Toronto Sun, Dec. 28, 05

There were several links to other articles--list included here only to indicate how much this is affecting Toronto citizens:

Feud grew into battle
Mourner: 'We have lost one of our children'
Murder rate holding - but gun crimes shoot up
Hunt to heat up
Shoppers scared off Yonge St.
Pols promise to act
Youths want more than talk
We've heard lots of talk from politicians about violent crime, but where's the action? Criminals need to fear consequences


The perpetrators? Who do you think they are? What is their business? Guess. Compliments of the leftist/socialist/soft-on-crime system. You may vote for more of the same in January.

Incidentally, why do you think FHTR gets visitors from Vietnam, Burma, Colombia, the Philippines, and a few other areas of similar 'business' interest? I don't think it is for the philosophy and certainly not for the recipe links. Just colour me cynical ... which might be a raging purple.



Anonymous & Crime Stats

An anonymous commenter wrote, taking me to task for something I posted on crime. The comments are at this link:

http://
frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/2005/08/
guns-drugs-and-crime-canadas-violent.html

"Guns, Drugs and Crime: Canada's Violent Crime Rate a Shock!"

Lott referred to Canadian statistics on crime from John Lott and, among other things, anonymous said.

the rate of 963 in Canada incorporates 8 different types of crime, while the 475 only incorporates 5. Also, Canada defines "violent crime" differently from the US.


I wish the person had written more about how Canada computes crime statistics compared to the US. He/she sounds as though s/he has knowledge of the situation, perhaps works within the system. I don't have a problem with anyone drawing these things to my attention. I am simply a very ordinary Canadian exploring because I know there is something wrong that violent gun crime appears to have risen in Canada. Anyway, I looked further. Some of what I found is below. The crime problem is more and more related to drugs; however, note how the system handles criminals, whether charged or something else. Does this not also affect the statistics?


The original article from John Lott--links inserted:

www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.p?ref=/
comment/lott200508190817.asp

Canada Blames US -- Gun-control folly here, up north, across the pond... John R. Lott Jr. Aug. 19, 05.

If you have a problem, it's often easier to blame someone else rather than deal with it. And with Canada's murder rate rising 12 percent last year and a recent rash of murders by gangs in Toronto and other cities, it's understandable that Canadian politicians want a scapegoat. That at least was the strategy Canada's premiers took when they met last Thursday with the new U.S. ambassador to Canada, David Wilkins, and spent much of their time blaming their crime problems on guns smuggled in from the United States.


www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/050721/d050721a.htm

torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2005/08/16/1175157-sun.html

Of course, there is a minor problem with the attacks on the U.S. Canadians really don't know what the facts are, and the reason is simple: Despite billions of dollars spent on the Canada's gun-registration program and the program's inability to solve crime, the government does not know how many crime-guns were seized in Canada, let alone where those guns came from. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police reported in late July that they "cannot know if [the guns] were traceable or where they might have been traced." Thus, even if smuggled guns were an important problem, the Canadian government doesn't know if it is worse now than in the past.

www.garrybreitkreuz.com/publicate/Columns/2005_aug_8.htm

www.garrybreitkreuz.com/issues/guninfo/2005/ffu_8_02.doc


Even in Toronto, which keeps loose track of these numbers, Paul Culver, a senior Toronto Crown Attorney, claims that guns from the U.S. are a "small part" of the problem.

www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/
LAC/20050815/GUNS15/TPNational/TopStories


There is another more serious difficulty: You don't have to live next to the United States to see how hard it is to stop criminals from getting guns. The easy part is getting law-abiding citizens to disarm; the hard part is getting the guns from criminals. Drug gangs that are firing guns in places like Toronto seem to have little trouble getting the drugs that they sell and it should not be surprising that they can get the weapons they need as well. [. . . . ]

Overall, the states in the U.S. that have experienced the fastest growth rates in gun ownership during the 1990s have experienced the biggest drops in murders and other violent crimes.


Many things affect crime: The rise of drug-gang violence in Canada and Britain is an important part of the story, just as it has long been important in explaining the U.S.'s rates. (Few Canadians appreciate that 70 percent of American murders take place in just 3.5 percent of our counties, and that a large percentage of those are drug-gang related.) Just as these gangs can smuggle drugs into the country, they can smuggle in weapons to defend their turf.

www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=0226493644

With Canada's reported violent-crime rate of 963 per 100,000 in 2003, a rate about twice the U.S.'s (which is 475), Canada's politicians are understandably nervous.

www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/050721/d050721a.htm

www.fbi.gov/filelink.html?file=/ucr/cius_03/xl/03tbl01.xls


While it is always easier to blame another for your problems, the solution to crime is often homegrown.






The Canadian report on crime statistics to which Lott referred:

I have excerpted what I see as pertinent.

2004 statistics

Canada's crime rate, based on data reported by police services, fell a marginal 1% last year. While the total violent crime rate declined, the national homicide rate increased 12%.

[. . . ] 2.6 million offences in 2004, resulting in a crime rate that was 12% lower than a decade ago. [Is this because crime has fallen or because it is unreported, unrecorded, recorded differently, not considered a crime or a serious crime any more? ]

. . . 5% decrease in Ontario, whose crime rate was the lowest in the country for the second year in a row. Most of this decline was due to large decreases in reported crime in the census metropolitan areas (CMAs) of Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa and St. Catharines–Niagara.

Prince Edward Island. . . decline. . . . Saskatchewan's crime rate, which experienced the largest increase of any province over the past decade, fell slightly in 2004. New Brunswick reported the largest increase, up 3%.



Violent crime down but homicide rate up

In total, about 300,000 violent crimes ... majority ... common assault. .... 35% higher than 20 years ago.

Canada's homicide rate rose 12% in 2004 after hitting a 36-year low the year before. Police reported 622 victims of homicide, 73 more than last year. Alberta, British Columbia and Quebec accounted for most of this increase. The rate of 1.9 homicides for every 100,000 population was 5% lower than it was 10 years earlier.

[. . . . ]

The highest homicide rates were in the territories and western Canada. Provincially, Manitoba reported the highest rate (4.3) followed by Saskatchewan (3.9). The lowest rates were reported in Atlantic Canada.

Among the nine largest census metropolitan areas (CMAs), Winnipeg had the highest homicide rate, followed by Edmonton and Vancouver. Quebec and Ottawa. . . lowest rates.

Among the 18 smaller CMAs, Regina, Abbotsford and Saskatoon recorded the highest rates. [. . . . ]

[chart here ]

Robberies with a firearm continue to decline

The rate of robbery incidents fell 4% ... Police reported more than 27,000 robberies, half of which were committed without a weapon .... robberies committed with a firearm...down 3% .... The remaining 35% of robberies were committed with other weapons such as knives.

Despite a national decline in robbery incidents, the Atlantic provinces experienced significant increases in 2004, ranging from 19% in Nova Scotia to almost 100% in Newfoundland and Labrador. However, robbery rates in the Atlantic provinces continue to be below the national rate.

About 41% of all robberies occurred in commercial establishments, including 16% in convenience stores or gas stations and 5% in banks. The next most common locations were streets/sidewalks (30%), private residences (8%) parking lots (6%) and open areas (5%).

Property crime resumes downward trend

Police reported nearly 1.3 million property crimes last year. ....generally been decreasing .... exception ... increase in 2003.

The rate of break-ins fell 4% to just under 275,000 and was 36% lower than a decade ago. More than one-half (56%) of break-ins were committed in residences, about one-third (31%) in businesses and the remaining 13% occurred in other areas such as garden sheds and schools.

[. . . ] break-in rates, [. . . ] Newfoundland and Labrador reported the largest increase in break-in rates, up 16%.

Police reported nearly 170,000 stolen motor vehicles last year. The rate of vehicle theft fell 4%, and it has declined in all but two years since peaking in 1996.

Cars...half of all vehicle thefts while trucks, including vans and sport utility vehicles, ... 34%. The rate of stolen cars dropped 4%, while truck thefts fell 2%.

Ontario (-12%) and British Columbia (-6%) reported the largest declines in vehicle thefts, while Newfoundland and Labrador (+52%), Nova Scotia (+24%) and Manitoba (+23%) recorded the largest increases. Manitoba continued to have the highest rate among the provinces, primarily due to the high rate of thefts in Winnipeg.

Counterfeiting



After large back-to-back increases in 2002 and 2003, the rate of growth in police-reported counterfeiting incidents slowed to 14%. In 2004, counterfeiting accounted for 6% of all criminal incidents, four times the proportion of only five years earlier. According to the Bank of Canada, $10 and $20 bills accounted for 87% of all counterfeit notes last year. [Is it possible the technology is allowing the expansion of this type of crime and that it has continued to increase? Or has this type of crime been slowed considerably? ]

Drug incidents resume upward trend



The rate of drug incidents increased 11% last year, following a 7% decline in 2003. Of the almost 100,000 drug incidents known to police in 2004, half were for possessing cannabis. The rate of cannabis possession incidents increased 15%.

Cannabis cultivation, otherwise known as marijuana grow operations, has more than doubled over the past decade, from 3,400 incidents in 1994 to more than 8,000 incidents last year. The rate of cocaine-related incidents increased by 17% in 2004, numbering nearly 17,000.

Youth crime down

About 78,000 youth aged 12 to 17 were charged with a Criminal Code offence last year, while a further 101,000 were cleared by means other than laying a formal charge. [ If they are not charged ... the statistics? ]

Combined, this represents a 4% decline in the overall youth crime rate — a 6% drop in youths charged and a 2% drop in youths cleared by other means. The youth crime rate had generally been increasing between 1999 and 2003.

The rate of violent crime among youth fell by 2%. ... stable, except for a large increase in 2000. Most categories of youth violent crime declined, including a 30% decrease in the youth homicide rate and a 2% drop in robbery.

The youth property crime rate fell 8%. The majority of property offences declined, including an 11% drop in the motor vehicle theft rate and an 8% decline in the rate of break-ins. [Have these actually declined or are people not reporting as they would have in the past?]

Available on CANSIM: tables 252-0013 and 252-0014.
Definitions, data sources and methods: survey number 3302.
[. . . . ]

Note on webpage:
This report is based on an annual Juristat released today by the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics (CCJS).

Data on incidents that come to the attention of the police are captured and forwarded to the CCJS via the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) survey according to a nationally-approved set of common scoring rules, categories and definitions.


Is that the same system as was subject to hackers?

Hacker cracks police force network
RCMP, OPP and Toronto service may be among victims
Thieves raid database favoured by law enforcement agencies
link posted on FHTR, Dec. 28, 05



Location, Location, Location & the Elephants in the Room




December 29, 2005

China's trade policy: "If you can make it, we can fake it."

Many moons ago a group of us were in London, and we saw large plasticized shopping bags emblazoned with a Union Jack. The motto at the bottom said: "Buy British". So mistakenly I bought one of the bags. In tiny print on the bottom it read: "Made in Portugal". Today it would say: "Made in China". For years since, we could buy their fake Vuitton luggage and Pucci-Gucci apparel. Oh yes, and endless pirated CDs and movies. However, the stakes have been raised by China's economic success. Today you can buy everthing from China. And while not technically fake, many of the goods are often shoddy; that is changing too. As I wrestle with my cheap-o Mao Brand garbage bags--Instructions: "If you can open in less than five minutes, you winner in Year of the Snake"--my $27 Chinese DVD player is working perfectly. The Great Walmart of China guarantees it will continue. In fact, the deluge of items that we import from China seem to swamp us. Hockey pads, bicycles, knock-off Nikes, clothing, and screwdrivers with built-in lights; there is no end to what they are exporting. And as one WalMart executive told an American supplier of moccasins, "You had better consider outsourcing your production, if you want to stay competitive." I suppose, to give him his patriotic due, he probably meant to India, which at least is a democracy that doesn't employ thousands of prisoners to do the work.

I don't wish to sound like an NDP convert on the road to Damascus, but Ottawa, we have a problem here. First, under NAFTA, we had companies moving either to America or Mexico to keep down costs. Today, China is the King Kong in the room. Heck, our Prime Minister has most of his shipping repairs done in China. Martin loves China. Presently they are gobbling up vast amounts of our commodities. Our Canadian Trade boys seem to be saying. "Send us your hockey pads and we'll send you our copper." All well and good, until the Chinese stop buying our copper because Chile can produce it cheaper. However by then a Canadian public has been seduced by the bargain rates of Chinese everyday products. So the garbage bags take an extra five minutes to open; they are still twice as cheap as any made in Canada. Even if you are a brand loyalist, who would never think twice of buying an electronic product not made in Japan, you will soon find the small print saying: "Sony, Made in China".

I do not know how to combat this race to the economic bottom. It is not only China, but India and the entire Third World that we have to watch out for. Industries and services businesses are fleeing North America for foreign cheap labour, goods and parts. A friend of mine who used to correspond with her company's branch in Tampa, now finds she is talking to some guy in Bangalorw, India. Who will eventually be left with a job here to even buy the cut-rate goods they offer us?

© Bud Talkinghorn--Just as China is about to flood the North American market with inexpensive cars, GM is filing for bankruptcy protection. Is that sheer coincidence?


Barbara Kay: Redefining perversion -&- Happy New Year to a Latin Beat

Happy New Year to you, Barbara Kay

You speak for many of us: Redefining perversion by Barbara Kay, December 28, 2005, Proud to be Canadian

Last night, I had another dream with Biblical narrative overtones: And it came to pass that those who loved Santa rose up in their numbers and called the SCC a false counsellor for setting aside the wisdom of the generations.

But the SCC harnessed its reign-dear cliches to its law-full Charter-ed sleigh - “Tolerance,” “Equality,” “Not-America,” all led by red-nosed “Minority Rights,” and drove Santa’s followers to retreat down Ottawa’s slippery slopes.

And lo, it came to pass in 2006 that those who believed in sexual modesty and public decency and the power of shame to keep decency’s flame alive were condemned by the SCC henceforth to be regarded as Canada’s new sexual perverts.




Latin Beat

I have searched for a Canadian equivalent of this source, Guitar CD's Ltd. , so far without luck. David Russell - Musica de barrios / Music Of Barrios -- I love Latin rhythms and this strikes my fancy.

1. Un Sueño En Le Floresta
2. Gavota Madrigal
3. Danza Paraguaya No. 1
4. Danza Paraguaya No. 2
5. Danza Paraguaya No. 3
6. Julia Florida
7. Vals Op 8, No 3
8. Vals De Primavera
9. Vals Tropical
10. Vals Op 8, No 4
11. Las Abejas
12. Fabiana
13. Mazurka Apasionata
14. Pais De Abanico
15. Cueca
16. La Catedral
17. A Mi Madre
18. Caazapá
19. Una Limosna Por El Amor De Dios


Andrés Segovia

The online shop is in the UK and I am still looking for that kind of selection here. Latin music -- various -- I enjoyed this, Sonora Carruseles. Search: Heavy Salsa




December 28, 2005

Quick Links -&- Happy New Year

Happy New Year

Short and Sweet -- A verse to share ... let's say in honour of the approaching New Year from uplink, 12/27/2005 00:02:16, posted on CNEWSForum -- no author nor source given -- worth considering ...

You ask
What is the quality
Of life? ...


This is the time of year when we reassess how we spend our lives, whether we are making the best use of our talents and time. I wish someone would explain to me why getting and spending are so much touted as necessary to a healthy economy ... for all? For whom? Is that all there is? (Peggy Lee) Are there not other values that give life meaning and that are worth reflection? In the wake of the increasing violence, gun crime, drugs, criminal gangs and the criminality which accompanies and emanates from the drug and crime businesses, should we not be more concerned with prevention, with helping to fix our communities, with our children, instead of grubbing for more junk and more money? Or is that too old fashioned a thought?



Paul Martin's response to the shootings in Toronto. "I think, more than anything else, they demonstrate what are, in fact, the consequences of exclusion." -- Note: "exclusion" pulled the trigger! Toronto Star, Dec. 27, 2005.

Perhaps PM should do a bit of reassessing, as well. Just what would our PM include them in? I don't want them in anything near me. I don't think playing basketball in my back yard would change them. I have a few other solutions, Paul. Let's do lunch and I'll enlighten you and your team on a few ideas.


Bitter debate expected over bid to deny citizenship to U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants David Crary, AP/wnd.com, Dec. 26, 05

NEW YORK -- A proposal to change long-standing federal policy and deny citizenship to babies born to illegal immigrants on U.S. soil ran aground this month in Congress, but it is sure to resurface _ kindling bitter debate even if it fails to become law.




Perhaps our SCOC should do a little reassessing? I have read that, for reasons best known to those who understand the fine points of the law, that this is a good decision -- but the little people (including me) fail to see it.


Canada new destination of choice for pedophiles? High court ruling legalized group-sex clubs with 14-year-olds James L. Lambert, Dec. 27, 2005, wnd.com

The Canadian Supreme Court ruling that redefined obscenity for that nation and legalized group-sex clubs, combined with Canada's unusually low age of consent – 14 – will result in an influx of pedophiles to America's neighbor to the north, contends a former consultant to the U.S. Justice Department.

In its Dec. 20 decision, Canada's Supreme Court legalized a type of business activity previously restricted by Canadian law, overturning two previous Quebec Court of Appeal decisions that had ruled group-sex clubs qualified as "bawdy houses" violating Quebec's community decency standards and were therefore illegal. [. . . . ]

Supreme Court Chief Justice Beverly McLachlin was joined by Justices Major, Binnie, Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron in the sex-club decision. Dissenting justices Michael Bastarache and Louis LeBel said the high court's ruling "strips of all relevance the social values that the Canadian community as a whole believes should be protected," according to Canada's Globe and Mail newspaper.


I draw the line at this. Parliament must intervene in the face of an activist court. Our society has gone too far with the idea that anything goes -- that any activity may be justified ... somehow, by someone with the right twist of mind. I prefer a simpler mind, that of one who senses when something is wrong for society -- as this is. At the very least, it must be debated by those who represent us, not decided for all by political appointees.

Dear SCOC, I am tired of every wheeze out of one province hitting the rest of us with a massive cold. Quebec had already made the decision. Leave well enough alone. Let the particular Quebec community decide. As for you, Supremes, take your finely honed reasoning out of the rest of our world. There are implications to your decisions which radiate too far and too deeply. They permeate our communities because you are leaning too far in a direction many of the rest of us see as negative. Because you are appointed and responsible to no-one, we feel helpless to stop a societal slide downward, one which has gone too far. We need strong families with two opposite sex parents and decisions such as this are negative for the best interests of the family and for children. These decisions are the province of our elected representatives, the ones we have a hope of influencing.



Do criminals/defense exploit sentencing loophole


Very very interesting: judge scandals and the Liberals



Hacker cracks police force network
RCMP, OPP and Toronto service may be among victims
Thieves raid database favoured by law enforcement agencies
Foxers, 12/27/2005 04:32:43 -- from the Toronto Star, Dec. 26, 2005.

OTTAWA—Major police forces across Canada, including the RCMP, OPP and the Toronto force, are among thousands of law enforcement agencies and forensic investigators whose private and financial information may have been stolen this month in a hacker attack, a published report says. [. . . . ]

Guidance makes EnCase, a suite of forensic investigation software that has become the standard tool used by computer crime units of police, insurance companies, banks and private computer forensics specialists.



Another very interesting result may ensue if you search Google: acoa, grant, moncton, school, flight



The Enablers

The Haiyang Zhang story -- Cheng Yonglin -- China spying in Canada -- PCO -- CSIS -- PM -- big holes in the story Kevin Steele, Dec. 23, 05, Western Standard -- Links to these: here -- here



UN High Commissioner for Human Rights & 'Free Speech'

Louise Arbour defender of Islamofascism Wonkitties, Dec. 22, 05 -- Read the full story here -- Wonkitties

It started when a Danish newspaper ran cartoon depictions of the Prophet Mohammed, some of which played upon violence committed by Islamofascists in the name of Islam


I have mentioned before the Canadian government's position on Islamofascists and the violence committed by the Bomb Backpackers. Our government does not protect free speech, the truth, nor expression of opinion. Our government's hate crimes law(s) curbs Canadian citizens' speech ... in case someone might point out an uncomfortable--sensitive--truth about who are the most vicious terrorists out of uniform in the world today. Arbour is simply another (probably Liberal) appointee holding the current Liberal views on this--perfect to represent the Liberal (need for Muslim votes) position to the UN.

I have explored as much as time would allow the globalization movement's influence (Arbour left the SCOC to join a world court, remember.) and the UN influence in Canada, along with a few other influences. On Frost Hits the Rhubarb, for example, check:

Week of Dec. 18, 05
http://
frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/
2005_12_18_frosthitstherhubarb_archive.html

Week of Dec. 11, 05
http://
frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/
2005_12_11_frosthitstherhubarb_archive.html

In particular, note a series on influences in Canada which I see as having wide-ranging negative implications for expression of divergent views. Too much is entering the realm of politically incorrect speech if anyone points out concerns. Some of my explorations have to do with criminality, some with the curbing of enquiry and free speech, enabled by a captive media regurgitating propaganda rather than pursuing journalistic investigation. All of this is influencing Canadians' ability to learn and hence, to act in their own best interests.

There are so many posts which I had hoped would alert Canadians, one of which is a series posted Dec. 19, 05 and starting with:

Why would a Canadian waste time the week before Christmas on this?
Follow the Yellow--Red--Brick Road #1 to #7




It may not be politically correct, but seriously, where would you look for nukes? -- "Feds sniffed for nukes at Muslim mosques throughout U.S...", NealeNews.com, Dec. 25, 05

It seems a logical place to start, though that is a dissenting opinion. Wait until North America looks more like the Middle East ... Perhaps they should check my bread pans for nukes instead?


Clockwork Orange killers set woman on fire for fun... -- If you have never seen the film, Clockwork Orange, rent it or borrow it, and see whether it was predictive of something dreadful that has come to pass. -- via Neale News

What would you do afterward? NealeNews, Dec. 25, 05, AP



Robert Fulford, for whose writing and analysis I have great respect, reviewed the film "Munich" (National Post, B1, Dec. 27, 05: Coming down firmly on both sides) Fulford was critical of the film, the interweaving of truth and imagination, particularly Spielberg's including the idea that guilt followed. -- On whose part, read to find out. There is one perpetrator still alive. Dec. 26, 05 CBC's "Passionate Eye" presented a program on the Olympics massacre of 1972 -- a touching account, except for the Palestinian left alive. The first lines of the program seemed to be intended as justification for this barbarity; however, the program improved after that.

Is Spielberg "Going to Extremes"? -- Spielberg redefines himself with Munich, his masterpiece By Andre Mayer, December 23, 2005, AP/CBC.ca

If you quack like a duck, and you walk like a duck, and you look like a duck: I am not ... Scroll down for a photo



Updates to a post: Mississauga-Erindale - Exploration of statements: "Islam won!" - "We have the east, we have the west, and now we have Mississauga!" on the nomination and subsequent controversy concerning Liberal Omar Alghabra posted Dec. 23, 05, The Muslim Canadian Congress has asked the Peel Police and the Attorney General's office to investigate ... and We must be supporting political parties and candidates on the basis of their platforms and principles, not their race or religion. -- more here -- here: "I disagree" -- If this organization is investigated then we will expect charges to be laid against Mohammed Elmasry for saying on the Michael Koren show that it is okay to kill Israelis. You know what they say about glass houses. -- [If] the police do an investigation that a lot will be exposed about the nomination process and the influence of Islam in the politics of that riding that will indeed backfire on them and the Liberal Party. -- If [Alghabra] considers it merely "the opinion... of editors" to correctly identify as a terrorist a homicide bomber who indiscriminately targets unarmed Israelis, then such a creature has no business running for political office. -- Omar Alghabra the Liberal candidate thanked ISNA? That's pretty scary.

http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6178

* Islamic organization which enforces extremist Wahhabi theological writ in America's mosques

* "America has to learn, if you remain on the side of injustice, the wrath of God will come." -- former ISNA president Muzammil Siddiqi

The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) enforces Wahhabi theological writ in America's 1,200 officially recognized mosques (out of a possible total of 4,000, including unrecognized and small congregations). In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, former ISNA president Muzammil Siddiqi appeared as a goodwill ambassador in an official ceremony at the National Cathedral in Washington. But some 10 months earlier, on October 28, 2000, Siddiqi had asserted, "America has to learn, if you remain on the side of injustice, the wrath of God will come. Please, all Americans. Do you remember that? If you continue doing injustice, and tolerate injustice, the wrath of God will come."

Many of the main mosques in the U.S. were recently built with Saudi money and saddled with a requirement that they follow Wahhabi imams and Wahhabi dictates. [. . . . ]



http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/1012 -- There are several items including: "Terror linked Islamic Society of North America invites President Bush to annual conference"


Muslims Are Held to Lower Standard Robert Spencer, Posted Dec 21, 2005

Schadenfreude is a recurring motif of Palestinian life. Some cheered the 9/11 attacks, passing out candy on that occasion as well. Many Palestinians have celebrated suicide bombings , including even mothers rejoicing in the deaths of their own children.

Much of this, of course, stems from a culture that celebrates death. [. . . . ]




"the madrassa of international politics"

Get 'em while they're hot! -- the list by Thomas P. Kilgannon, "Top 10 countries that vote against the U.S. at the United Nations"

10. Cuba (92.6%)

Fidel Castro is one of the leading promoters of anti-Americanism at the UN. Each year, Cuba sponsors a resolution condemning the U.S. embargo. First introduced in 1992, only 59 countries voted with Castro. But the Clinton Administration allowed Cuba to twist arms, and today, only three countries vote with the U.S. on this issue.

[. . . . ] 8. Saudi Arabia (92.8%)

The General Assembly is the madrassa of international politics, and the Saudis are as effective as any country in building opposition to U.S. policies at the UN and teaching hatred of Israel, one of America’s strongest allies.




Why Not Support Democracy? Our orphan policy in the Middle East Dec. 23, 05

Why still no big-font, front-page headlines screaming, “Millions Vote in Historic Middle East Election!” or “Democracy Comes At Last To Iraq” or “America’s Push for Iraqi Democracy Working”?

Besides the politics of gloom — Bush at home and America abroad are always wrong — and the weariness with the violence, there has sadly been too small a constituency for trusting that Arabs should run their own affairs through consensual government. [. . . . ]



Pentagon Madrassas Evan McCormick, FrontPageMagazine.com, Dec. 2, 2003

[. . . . ] This is just the latest example in a troubling history of official ignorance about the fact that extremists are exploiting the chaplaincy program as a platform for subversion of US forces. In order to end this vulnerability to our enemies in the War on Terror, officials must face the problem and act immediately. [. . . . ]


Search: Alamoudi and the American Muslim Council , Graduate School of Islamic Social Sciences , Islamic Society of North America



Talk-show host fired for linking Islam, terror -- another in the free speech series posted by David 2005/08/22, "Talk-show host fired for linking Islam, terror"

[. . . . ] "It appears that ABC Radio has caved to an organization that condemns talk radio hosts like me, but has never condemned Hamas, Hezbollah, and one that wouldn't specifically condemn al-Qaida for three months after 9-11," he said. "As a fan of talk radio, I find it absolutely outrageous that pressure from a special interest group like CAIR can result in the abandonment of free speech and open discourse on a talk radio show. As a conservative talk host whose job is to have an open, honest conversation each day with my listeners, I believe caving to this pressure is a disaster." [. . . . ]

As WorldNetDaily reported, CAIR's chairman of the board, Omar Ahmad, was cited by a California newspaper in 1998 declaring the Quran should be America's highest authority. He also was reported to have said Islam is not in America to be equal to any other religion but to be dominant. [. . . . ]


At this point, it might be instructive to review Louise Arbour's views, link above. Brave new Canada.

December 27, 2005

Christmas News: Toronto Waterfront Audit, Zhang, Lafleur, Military Purchase, DART, Hillier-Airbus-Build in China? Steel, Arms Sales to China?

Update: New posts have been added below: "Supervising the formation of public opinion ... Revocation: Citizenship, Root Causes, Media Creation"


T.O. waterfront deal undegoes audit -- Why has Citizenship and Immigration taken responsibility for the Toronto waterfrontproject? Dean Beeby, Dec.23, 05


OTTAWA (CP) - An audit of millions of dollars spent sprucing up Toronto's waterfront has found numerous contracting irregularities and questionable overseas travel.

[. . . . ] A spokesman for Citizenship and Immigration, which has taken over responsibility for the Toronto project, said the audit has sparked a new probe into the non-tendered contracts.

[. . . . ] Campbell added that his overseas trips to London, Hamburg and Barcelona, with board chair Robert Fung, were to inspect other waterfront projects and all were approved after the fact by the corporation's board.


Search: John Campbell, Robert Fung



Why would a relatively new immigrant from China be hired to work in the Privy Council Office ... later fired by Alex Himmelfarb? Paul Waldie, Dec. 23, 05, Globe and Mail


[. . . . ] Ms. Zhang said she worked at the news service from 1989 to 1992 and did routine stories. She said her only contact with "foreign representatives" is helping Canadian businesses develop markets in China.

[. . . . ] having married a Canadian she met while working at the Chinese news service. [. . . . ]


I wondered why, when I had read previously that Canadian-born Chinese would not be able to facilitate business with China the way a Chinese-born facilitator would.


Secret life: Visa student's downfall -- Sensational cases highlight problem -- Crimes prompt task force in China Martin Regg Cohn & Karen Mazurkewich, TorStar, Dec. 24, 05


SHANGQIU, China [. . . . ] Like so many other young Chinese who go abroad, Suo Zhiyang's fate was entrusted to a local agency that promised the world: For a fee the family could count on easy admissions, work permits and guaranteed immigrant status for their son, according to the sales pitch.

[. . . . ] The family ended up paying $100,000 for the son's education, stashing wads of cash into secret money belts to evade customs controls, according to the father.




And Getting Away From It All

Update: Jean Lafleur, Adscam, Costa Rica Adscam player in Belize? By Judi McLeod, Friday, December 23, 2005, Canada Free Press

Check our chances for getting ADSCAM $$$ returned and why Belize is so attractive? Is the RCMP looking for Lafleur? Isn't there a lawsuit in process?



Inn Chef recipes at present freely available -- e.g. Triangle Terrine of Honey Cured Salmon and Vermouth with a Caraway Rye Crisp, Homemade Mustard, Pickled Red Onions and Mustard Sprouts









Thoughts of Military Purchase ... so much happens over Christmas ...

Dec. 26, 05, in the Globe and Mail in a tiny box on the bottom of page A21

Airbus may have an offer General Hillier can't refuse says editor Dianne DeMille, editor of the Canadian American Strategic Review.


Search: Canadian American Strategic Review

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New pages (December 2005) – Tactical Airlift With a Twist? CF tactical airlift looked like a shoe-in until Airbus spun an original and unexpected 2-stage proposal. How will Lockheed Martin respond?

Past pages (December 2005) – the Armoured Patrol Vehicle project and its candidates are reviewed.

Past pages (November 2005) – Sikorsky CH-53 Super Stallion added to helicopter ’lifter section.

http://www.sfu.ca/casr/bg-airlift-tactical.htm
http://www.sfu.ca/casr/bg-patrol-apv.htm
http://www.sfu.ca/casr/bg-helo-ch53.htm
http://www.sfu.ca/casr/bg-helicopters.htm





Hillier's Hopes for the Holidays – Honkin' Huge Helicopters! Dianne DeMille & Stephen Priestley – published in View from the West*, Oct. 2005

*First published in View from the West, a column in the Winnipeg Free Press.
The WFP is the last major independent newspaper left in Western Canada.



In a CP article published on 14 September 2005, Minister of National Defence, Bill Graham, admitted that, in this crucial deployment, the CF won’t have all the support equipment it needs.

“Heavy helicopters, for example – we don’t have any at the moment. They will be furnished either by the Dutch, the British, or the Americans, or by other allies.

[. . . . ] So, the immediate options before General Rick Hillier reveal a tough choice. Hillier can (1) order a coat of Army green paint for the 15 SAR Comorants,
(2) lease (or lease - to - own) Russian Mil 17s, or (3) beg for rides on allies’ Chinooks, until the Air Force is completely happy with its latest shopping list.

The purpose of an analyst is to present the options. It will be up to General Hillier to make the final recommendations to the Minister and his Cabinet colleagues.




Getting all the ducks in a row


Arcelor to boost Dofasco offer Dec. 24, 05, Toronto Star


Rejected Bidder Raises Offer for a Canadian Steel Maker New York Times, Dec. 24, 05

Arcelor Increases Dofasco Bid, Topping ThyssenKrupp's (Update 4) Bloomberg, Dec. 23, 05

Europe's Arcelor increases offer to $4.9 Billion for Canadian steelmaker CBC, Dec. 23, 05


Arcelor of Belgium increases offer to acquire Canadian steelmaker CJAD, Dec. 23, 05



Do we Dither? Or do we DART? Jan. 2, 2005, Dianne DeMille & Stephen Priestly

Dianne DeMille is Editor of the Canadian American Strategic Review (CASR), an online publication hosted by Simon Fraser University in B.C. Stephen Priestley is Researcher/Illustrator with the Review. (http://www.sfu.ca/casr)


The world is faced with the most horrific natural disaster in living memory, yet the Canadian government insists our 200-strong Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) may not be "the right tool" for this particular calamity.

How could this be? Is the Martin government, which refused to send DART to hurricane-ravaged Haiti in August -- apparently because it was too expensive -- dithering in public again? What are the problems with deployment this time? [. . . . ]


Search:

a debilitating bottleneck
smaller, more agile units.
five 20-year-old converted airliners, the CC-150 Polaris. This early-model Airbus
a Russian-Ukrainian air-cargo charter company, Volga Dnepr.
Leasing cargo aircraft
reliable air transport -- both strategic and tactical.
For tactical airlift, replacing Canada's worn-out Hercules fleet
Russia is the one affordable
at comparatively low cost.
new IL-76MFs are being produced in Voronezh, Russia,
Taxpayers should be asking why this option has not been seriously considered before.
its U.S. counterpart, the C-141.



Double DART (or make it smaller?) Ira Basen, CBC.ca Reality Check Team, Dec. 14, 2005, More Reality Check (check site for link)


[. . . . ] But what if it all didn't have to go at once? DeMille and Priestley suggest breaking DART up into its various "sub-units" – water purification, medical, communications, support, and security. Sending the sub-units that are required first, with the others following later, would allow DART to be deployed more quickly and for less money. So too would investing in newer generations of smaller, more mobile field hospitals, water purifiers and hybrid diesel/electric trucks. [. . . . ]




Canadian American Strategic Review


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Airbus to study feasibility of building jets in China Reuters / Boston Globe, December 5, 2005


TOULOUSE, France -- Airbus agreed with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao yesterday to study the possibility of setting up an assembly line in China -- a move that could see its jets being built outside Europe for the first time.

Wen signed an agreement to carry out a feasibility study at the start of a European trip expected to unlock provisional Chinese orders for 70 A320-family single-aisle Airbus aircraft worth $5 billion. Airbus and Chinese authorities will review over six months whether to set up a second A320 assembly line in China. [. . . . ]

Along with Germany, France is campaigning for the European Union to drop an embargo on arms sales to China that was imposed after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing, in which tanks were sent to crush pro-democracy protests.




Around-The-Globe: Airbus Set To Launch A3XX Todd Jatras, Forbes.com, Dec. 15, 05


NEW YORK - After clinching a deal today to sell six A3XX planes to Virgin Atlantic Airways, Airbus Industrie has reached the 50 orders it previously said it needed to launch its long-range, double-decker super-jumbo aircraft. . . .

[. . . . ] Airbus claims the A3XX will offer 20% lower seat operating costs compared to the 747-400, while providing up to 40% more seats and 10% to 15% more range, or a total of 7,650 nautical miles per flight. So, it would seem that Boeing has a real quandary on its hands as to how it should compete with Airbus in the battle to supply companies with aircraft for international routes.

With Virgin, Singapore Airlines, Qantas, Air France, Emirates Airlines and International Lease Finance already on board, and Lufthansa and British Airways on deck, the A3XX could become a real headache for Boeing. The prospect of onboard gyms, bars, casinos, game arcades, beauty centers, child care areas, conference rooms and showers may just be too compelling for the world's airlines to resist.



The Globe and Mail: Airbus has history of twisted landing gear -- re: O-ring seals September 23, 2005



I's the Byes that raises the boats ... Legal Prostitution? Political Polling & 'Open source methodology'

A Rising Tide Raises All Boats ... in Atlantic Canada

The Liberal Government: Encouraging Research and Innovation in Atlantic Canada
December 21, 2005

Rising Tide document including the Atlantic Innovation Fund (AIF). [Is this administered by MP Greg Byrne or Minister Scott?]

We initially launched this initiative as a $300 million dollar fund in 2000 and in Budget 2004 it was replenished with an additional $300 million, as part of the $708 million – Atlantic Investment Partnership “the Second Wave”.

[. . . . ] approximately 100 R&D projects in Atlantic Canada

For every dollar invested by the fund, $1.14 has been leveraged by the private sector, universities and other research organizations, national programs and provincial governments.

[. . . . ] Atlantic Canadians, the region’s Knowledge-Based Economy has broadened and deepened with the development of emerging industries such as life sciences and ocean technologies, aerospace and information technology.

Atlantic Canada is also continuing to diversify its traditional economic base with the expansion of value-added activities in the food, and wood and paper industries, while a new oil and gas industry has emerged and is helping to drive economic growth in the region.


Ready for the election ...



Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network suggests "Legalizing prostitution — why now?" Arthur Weinreb, Associate Editor, Monday, December 19, 2005

[. . . . ] Last week, Toronto City Council agreed to issue "safe crack kits" to those who partake of the illegal drug and are considering setting up safe injection sites where those who take illegal drugs can safely break the law. These measures were praised by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. There is no doubt that this current "mature" council doesn’t give a damn about what takes place on the streets of the city or what effect the homeless, prostitutes and drug users have on the law abiding residents or businesses in Toronto. They couldn’t care less that children will be playing in yards littered with used crack pipes that will soon be emblazed with the City of Toronto logo.


So inclusive. Should the rest of us get out our guilt complexes and dust them off? Should communities not be able to have a referendum on what they want to do about a group of activities which tend to intermesh and affect their neighbourhoods? Do women go into prostitution to support a drug habit or is it one of the few job opportunities requiring no education and a limited set of skills? Is it not part of the human smuggling problem? Should we legalize it and then the prostitutes may stay in Canada? So many questions ...



Desmarais roots in area go back to '60s -- Canada Steamship owned estate Mark Cardwell, Dec.24, 05

According to people around Sagard, Paul Desmarais Sr. has been a regular visitor to the area since taking control of Power Corp. in 1968.

[. . . . ] Chief among the companies Power Corp. controlled was Canada Steamship Lines, which was a major landowner in the Charlevoix region.


Search: sold the 21,000-acre lot to Power Corp for $1.



Middle East Progress Amid Global Gains in Freedom New York,December 19, 2005, Belmont Incorporated (http://www.belmontinc.com/ )

http://
www.freedomhouse.org/tem
plate.cfm?page=70&release=317

[. . . . ] The global survey, "Freedom in the World," shows that although the Middle East continues to lag behind other regions, a measurable improvement can be seen in freedom in several key Arab countries, as well as the Palestinian Authority. In another key finding, the number of countries rated by Freedom House as Not Free declined from 49 in 2004 to 45 for the year 2005, the lowest number of Not Free societies identified by the survey in over a decade. In noteworthy country developments, Ukraine and Indonesia saw their status improve from Partly Free to Free; Afghanistan moved from Not Free to Partly Free; and the Philippines saw its status decline from Free to Partly Free. [. . . . ]

Complete survey results, including a package of charts and graphs, and an explanatory essay are available online. The Ratings reflect global events from December 1, 2004 through November 30, 2005. Country narratives will be released in book form in summer 2006. [. . . . ]

There are two worst-rated territories: Tibet (under Chinese jurisdiction) and Chechnya, where an indigenous Islamic population is engaged in a brutal guerrilla war for independence from Russia.


Search: "The eight worst-rated countries represent a narrow range of systems and cultures."



Political Polling: “open source” as a metaphor to describe the notion of full disclosure of all methodological details

Demystifying the Science and Art of Political Polling - By Mark Blumenthal, December 23, 2005, MP in POQ -- TrackBack URL for this entry:

Finally (for today) I have a surprise and something of a holiday gift from the editors of Public Opinion Quarterly.

As a personal venture, this blog has paid some truly gratifying and utterly unexpected dividends. Topping the list during 2005 was an invitation I received from the editors of Public Opinion Quarterly (POQ) to submit an article for their special issue on the polls, the media and the 2004 campaign. That issue is out this week, and the editors POQ have consented to allow MP readers to access my article -- "Toward an Open-Source Methodology: What We Can Learn from the Blogosphere" -- free of charge. There are two versions, a PDF replica of the printed article and an HTML version with live links to footnotes and sources.

For years I have turned to POQ for the latest gold standard research and commentary on survey methodology from the most noted authorities in the field. [. . . . ]


Any discussion of methodology leads into the next post.



Having read the above, what do you think of this? -- mentions poll conducted by Ipsos Reid -- "Election race dead heat as party leaders stand down for holiday break" by Mark Kennedy CanWest, Dec. 24, 05

I have a jpeg on public opinion research. What is the methodology used by Ipsos Reid?




Why is it that, every election I remember, the poll results up until election day always sound as if it a horse race, that the parties are neck and neck? Is this good for selling 'news'? Then, we get the negative poll ... when? Oh, just before people vote, perhaps, help them to decide to vote for the "winning side" -- That's a Cynic's Assessment--pure NJC.

Why might Ipsos Reid president Darrell Bricker report this?

``Nobody has seized the agenda in this campaign,'' said Bricker. ``Whatever attachments people have to their voting support, they're not running with glee to the voting both.''


Then, there is The Star's Chantal Hebert, Dec. 23, 2005: delivering strictly opinion -- or is it cold-weather planting ... of an idea? Decide for yourself.

http://
www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Con
tentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/
Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=11352495
09733&call_pageid=970599119419

I felt that Hebert's ending was strong, but I see Quebeckers waking up and absolutely livid about the Liberal Party (and the corruption) that has used them in order to emphasize the differences between Quebeckers and the rest, to use this in order to win election. I found again an article that highlights Jean Lapierre's cynicism in the service of overcoming the Gomery fallout and getting Quebec votes. ***

[. . . . ] Two decades after patriation of the Constitution, the federal Liberal party is a spent force in Quebec. The days when it competed fiercely with the sovereignist movement for the best and brightest of Quebecers are behind it.

And that means that, in the not-so-distant future, Canadians will have to tap other sources than the dried-out Quebec reservoir for national leadership.



*** "Equalization is not vote-buying .... Lapierre's speech to the Quebec wing included several references to deals struck between Ottawa and Quebec City over the past year, outlining what appeared to be a battle-plan to overcome Gomery fallout." Jonathan Montpetit, Nov. 11, 05

Search:

additional money
using an old formula
revamped by a committee
Finance Minister Ralph Goodale




Supervising the formation of public opinion ... Revocation: Citizenship, Root Causes, Media Creation

Our motto must be to lie in order to conquer. (Benito Mussolini)


It is the absolute right of the State to supervise the formation of public opinion. (Josef Paul Goebbels 1923 address )


Was it also Goebbels who said when you tell a lie, "Tell a big lie and tell it often."? (from memory])

Who is in bed with whom? ... glass houses and all that via Newsbeat1
More Martin hypocrisy on national unity
21 December 2005

OTTAWA – Today Paul Martin said, “I would never for a moment, suggest that Stephen Harper, for partisan political purposes, would prefer a separatist victory…. I believe I am entitled to the same courtesy from Stephen Harper.”

Oh really? So why is it that Mr. Martin and his party make a habit of accusing the Conservative Party of “being in bed with the separatists” to “dismantle this country.”

“We would see him [Stephen Harper] and (Bloc Québécois Leader) Gilles Duceppe, if they get enough seats, working together to dismantle this country that all of us are so proud of." (Paul Martin, Toronto Star, December 3, 2005)

Martin questioned how the Tory leader can explain “his common agenda with the separatists.” (Ottawa Citizen, June 3, 2005)

“Stephen Harper has made it so clear that he is prepared to do the Bloc's bidding in Parliament, which I find incomprehensible...” (Paul Martin, Ottawa Citizen, April 28, 2005)

“Let me tell you, Stephen Harper, you made an alliance with the Bloc, not me. The Bloc wants only one thing: a referendum to divide us and break up our country.” (Paul Martin, Globe and Mail, November 29, 2005)

“The Conservative Party and the separatists … want this Parliament to fail because the Bloc wants Canada to fail.” (Public Works Minister Scott Brison, Hansard, May 2, 2005)

“…it is impossible to understand why the Conservative Party supports the Bloc” (Scott Brison, Hansard, April 5, 2005)

“[There is] a Bloc-Conservative alliance which potentially could cause all kinds of difficulties on national unity.” (Labour Minister Joe Fontana, The Hill Times, April 18, 2005)

“It has become clear that the Conservative-Bloc alliance is alive and well, despite the Leader of the Opposition's claims to the contrary.” (Susan Kadis, Hansard, May 17, 2005)

“It is an unholy alliance [Between Conservatives and the Bloc] and Canadians need to know all about it. I take great exception to the hypocrisy of saying that they are not in bed with the Bloc and the separatists because they are.” (Roy Cullen, Hansard, April 14, 2005)

Mr. Martin has forgotten that those who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.


Trust Giles Duceppe or trust PM? ... I think I would choose Duceppe ... Interpret that as you will.




Flags of convenience via newsbeat1 Dec. 26, 05

When I explained the prime minister of our nation did just that they found it hard to believe we would elect someone to the highest office of our land who was so unpatriotic he put personal wealth ahead of the good of the nation and its principles.



Memory Lane: PM, CSL ... & Special Tax Arrangements

Lest Canadians forget how that was achieved which is detailed in this previous post, along with the amendment to change the situation: Proposed Amendment: Income Tax -- Note, CSL October 10, 2005

This concerns tax havens and companies such as CSL, our PM and his government, along with business friends who operate globally, who, undoubtedly, will not be amused at this proposal -- a co-operative endeavour, it appears, between the Bloc Quebecois and the Conservatives.

CSL is now owned by Paul Martin's sons . . . Should we assume this will not affect the PM and that he will approve?

Private Members' Business: Amendment to Income Tax Act Regulations

http://
www.parl.gc.ca/38/1/parlbus/
chambus/house/debates/133_2005-10-06/
HAN133-E.htm




Dubious 'domestic spying' charges -- re: US Tod Lindberg, Dec. 27, 05

Ignoring the law by engaging in domestic spying? Flouting the law? Willfully violating the law? No, on the contrary. The Bush administration's record is quite clear and consistent: Somewhere inside the locked filing cabinets of this administration's top lawyers are perfectly clear and cogent legal arguments on behalf of, dare one say, every single official action the administration has ever taken.






Revocation of citizenship ... in case someone asks

This concerned comments about the Khadr family on CNEWS Forum -- the link leads to a government site. Uplink wrote:

"If they lied to obtain citizenship or landed immigrant status, it can be revoked."

A little more info here: [See below]


This could only apply to the mother - I believe that the children were all born in Canada and I'm not aware of any mechanism to revoke their citizenship.



BILL C-18: THE CITIZENSHIP OF CANADA ACT

http://
www.parl.gc.ca/common/bills_ls.asp?P
arl=37&Ses=2&ls=c18#3revocationtx [Place on one line.]

Prepared by:
Benjamin Dolin, Margaret Young
Law and Government Division
1 November 2002

3. Revocation

The Minister is permitted to commence an action for revocation of citizenship in Federal Court if it is alleged that citizenship was obtained by false representation, by fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances (clause 16).(5) There will be a presumption that a person who obtained permanent residence by such means also acquired citizenship illegally (clause 16(3)). There is no clause prohibiting an appeal from any decision of the Federal Court – Trial Division.(6)

The Minister, when applying for a revocation of citizenship, may also request that the person be declared inadmissible on security grounds, for violating human or international rights, or for organized criminality (clause 16(4)).

[. . . . ] If the Court determines that citizenship should be revoked, when assessing whether the person is inadmissible on security grounds, for violating human or international rights, or for organized criminality, the Court is not be bound by any technical or legal rules of evidence. It is permitted to receive and base a decision on any evidence it considers credible or trustworthy.

Clause 17 of the bill sets out in detail the process for those accused of terrorism, war crimes or organized crime. It allows for the use of protected information in these cases when the judge determines that disclosure could be injurious to national security ....

If citizenship is revoked pursuant to clause 16 or 17, the IRPA provides that the person loses permanent resident status as well(7) and is inadmissible to Canada for misrepresentation. (8)

4. Annulment Orders

In addition to the existing mechanism for revoking citizenship described above, Bill C-18 gives the Minister a new power to issue an annulment order (clause 18). This order can declare that any obtention, retention, renunciation or resumption of citizenship is void. . . . where the person has used a false identity, or was originally ineligible to be granted citizenship for any of the reasons in clause 28 . . . .

One of the grounds for making the proposed annulment order, the use of a false identity, could easily be comprised in the criteria for revocation – false representation, fraud, or concealing material circumstances. [. . . . ]




The Charter's "saving grace", section 33

Is the notwithstanding clause the Charter's fatal flaw? reasoning from Russ Kuykendall, Dec. 22, 05 -- links to Canadian Bill of Rights -- including property rights -- Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms -- Stephen Taylor if you scroll down.






Peace, Tolerance, Diversity, and Multicultural Christmas Message from Tupamaro

It's about time Canada became an Islamist nation--to counter the perfidious King George of stinking Jesusland! -- That was in response to Liberal strategy a dangerous mix of religion and politics

And which "root cause" accounts for that? And the following?

Which 'root cause' accounts for this? Brian Gray & Brett Clarkson, "2 hurt in shootings" TorSun, Dec. 23, 05 -- Seven people shot in downtown gunfight -- Teen bystander killed near Yonge and Dundas. Kelly Patrick, Chris Wattie and Melissa Leong; with filesfrom Siri Agrell, National Post,December 27, 2005


Root cause? ... Hired thugs

Three guilty of murder of pot growers -- That's the strength of the Canadian weed business, folks and note the use of "hired thugs". Tracy McLaughlin, TorSun, Dec23, 05

BARRIE -- After almost a week of deliberations, a jury found three men guilty of first-degree murder in the death of a Vietnamese couple who were shot and clubbed to death on a desolate road near the Barrie Drive-Inn three years ago.

Tung Duong, 38, of Mississauga, Ibrahim Yumnu, 48, of Wasaga Beach, Vinicio Cardoso, 39, of Toronto, were found guilty in the killings of Bong Bui and her husband, Dung Ton, following a nine-month murder trial.

[. . . . ] Co-accused Bruce Glen, 38, of Caledon and Genevieve Ward, 45, of Wasaga Beach, were found not guilty.


Search: clubbed , lure , cheat , profit from their marijuana growing operation

Multiculturalism has worked in some enterprises.





3 of 4 federal parties in debt Dec. 24, 05

According to Elections Canada, in their last annual filing, the Liberal Party of Canada was $34,818,257.32 in debt, by way of 13 bank loans. The Bloc Quebecois has more than $10 million in outstanding loans, mostly from the Caisse Desjardins. The NDP has several modest loans outstanding, totalling a little more than $3 million. The Conservatives are debt-free.




Plastic Patrotism - Paul Martin Style December 24, 2005, By Charles Adler

I will always defend Canadian interests. This party will always embrace Canadian values. Is the plastic patriotism getting a little thick? [. . . . ]

To hear you on the stump under your canopy of flags, one would think that you invented Canadian values. Just because someone challenges what you think, doesn't make him unpatriotic. It's not like we are at war and your opponent is supporting the enemy. [. . . . ]


Charles Adler is heard on 11 radio stations across the Corus Radio Network, including CKNW-Vancouver, 630CHED-Edmonton, CHQR770-Calgary-AM640-Toronto, AM980-London, CKOM-Saskatoon, CJME-Regina,CHML-Hamilton, AM940-Montreal



Is CTV deliberately attempting to mislead?

Are the media circling the wagons in the service of the PM and the status quo?


Just exactly what does CTV mean by the phrase in blue? -- "Liberal photo 'beyond tasteless,' Harper says", Prepared with a report from CTV's Robert Fife, CTV.ca News Staff, Dec. 23 2005

This is an article supposedly detailing Liberal deception and a dirty campaign trick; yet, it suggests that it is the Conservatives who will be negative.

The photo, depicting a quiet conversation between Harper and Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe, is featured in campaign instructions available to Liberal candidates online.

"I think it's beyond tasteless," Harper said Friday, noting that the photo was taken when all four federal party leaders were attending a Holocaust memorial on Parliament Hill last spring.

"To imply that Mr. Duceppe and I share some sort of agenda other than opposing the Holocaust is disgraceful."




What was CTV attempting to say with this?

But Harper stopped short Friday of vowing his party would avoid negative campaigning in its bid to mislead the public in his bid to form a Conservative government.


That webpage had a link to this: Political attack ads coming in the new year CP, Dec. 22 2005

Prime Minister Paul Martin insisted he wants to keep the debate focused on issues, but in several interviews would not rule out trying to demonize Harper.


According to the article,
attack ads go after personality, judgment and character
Well, I want a new government and a new PM. Liberal corruption and sleazy politics have dominated Canada for too long. Remember what Jean Chretien tried to do to Brian Mulroney and his reputation? Paul Martin is simply following in the Master's footsteps.


True to form, the end of that article mentions how the media can help use such attack ads:

The power of a negative ad is actually indirect and lies in the media coverage it generates, said Rose.


Think about what is opinion, really created news, in the article above, the discussion of whether there would be negative ads for the election. What would the media do without the controversy which they are instigating with their 'news', it seems.



Change of emphasis ...

Reporting "The Polls" in 2004 Polling and the Media, Kathleen A. Frankovic, director of surveys for CBS News, Public Opinion Quarterly 2005 69(5):682-697; doi:10.1093/poq/nfi066

Media reports of polls indicate how well public opinion polls have been integrated into campaign coverage. This article examines how polls were used in 2004. Although there were relatively limited methodological changes in how polls were conducted in 2004, there were changes in how the polls were treated in the media. Americans in 2004 were subjected to intense debates about polls and to as much reporting about "the polls" as there was of the polls themselves. The discussion of "the polls" in 2004 included claims of electability during the Democratic nominating process, increased reporting about methodological issues, and heightened political criticisms of "the polls." The article concludes with a discussion of the current state and the future of news polling. [. . . . ]


POQ



December 25, 2005

Christmas: Blessings to All




Break forth, O beauteous heavenly light,
And usher in the morning;
The Savior now, unveiled to sight,
On earth as human dwelling:
This child, now weak in infancy,
Our confidence and joy shall be.
Let all the heavens adore him
And earth bow down before him!

I received this from a friend and I appreciate it. It reminded me again of why we celebrate Christmas. My wish for all is that you have a Blessed Christmas surrounded by family and friends who understand the message of Christmas. The other aspects--food, gifts, all the accoutrements--are peripheral to the true meaning of Christmas in our tradition. NJC